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Using information collected from from Oxford University, National Public Radio’s Planet Money team developed an online database of jobs and whether they could soon be performed by robots.

According to the Bangor Daily News, “fourteen of the top 20 jobs in Maine – in terms of numbers of workers – have a 50 percent or greater chance of being taken over by robots, the Oxford University researchers hypothesize. Ten of those have a likelihood of greater than 85 percent, including customer service representatives, which are considered 99 percent likely to be handed off to some kind of androids.”

The program’s creators at NPR have acknowledged outright that “these estimates are rough and likely to be wrong,” characterizing the results as “a snapshot of what some smart people think the future might look like.”

Jobs such as mental health and substance abuse social workers are unlikely to be taken over by robots, the database developers said, because they “ranked high in cleverness, negotiation and helping others.” Telemarketers, in comparison, are already being replaced in many places by computers, the NPR team points out.

Of the top 20 professions in Maine, elementary school teachers are the least likely to be removed in favor of automatons, the report found, at just 0.4 percent. Other jobs deemed relatively safe from robots were those in the medical field, such as nurses and physicians assistants, who were determined to be just 14.5 percent likely to be taken over by robots.

Here are the top jobs in Maine, how many people perform them and the likelihood they will be taken over by robots in the future, according to the NPR/Oxford University research: